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Indian Easements Act

Practice Test 1

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The word ‘easement’ is defined in Section . . . . . . . . of the Indian Easements Act, 1882

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An easement may be used for any purpose not connected with the enjoyment of the domain heritage. The statement is

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Which of the following is not an ingredient of easement?

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Easement is a right-

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When did The Indian Easements Act 1882, come into force?

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Easement cannot be created by

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Which section of The Indian Easements Act 1882 deals with the Transfer of dominant heritage passes easement?

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Quasi-easement is

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The land for the beneficial enjoyment of which the easementary right exists is called

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Match the following

a. Dominant tenement
1. The owner of the land, for the benificial enjoyment of which, the right exists

b. Dominant owner
2. The land on which the liability is imposed

c. Servient owner
3. The land, for the beneficial enjoyment of which, the right exists

d. Servient tenement
4. The owner or occupier of the land on which the liability is imposed

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Which of the following is an accessory right?

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Which section of The Indian Easements Act 1882 deals with Exclusion in favour of reversioner of servient heritage?

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‘Res-Suanemini servit’ means

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Easement by grant may be created

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Section 10 of The Indian Easements Act 1882 deals with . . . . . . . . ?

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The grant of and transfer of licences is governed by:

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The law of easement is a branch of law of

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The branches of the trees extended over the neighbouring soil for a continuous length of time.

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Which section of The Indian Easements Act 1882 deals with the Servient owners.?

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In case of customary rights, easements are . . . . . . . . rights annexed to the place in general

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Dominant tenement means:

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A grants B a right to walk over A’s field whenever he pleases. The right is not annexed to any immovable property of B can the right be transferred?

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Essentials of a valid custom exclude

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Under section 63 of the Indian Easements Act, 1882 the Licensee has the right on revocation which means

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A continuous easement to is extinguished when it totally ceases to be enjoyed as such for an unbroken period of how many years:

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The land, for the beneficial enjoyment of which easement exists, is called:

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Which of the following Sections of the Indian Easements Act, defines the term ‘customary easement’?

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Under section 64 of the Indian Easements Act, 1882 when a Licensee is evicted by the grantor of property without any fault of his own then

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Necessary conditions for creation of easement by prescription are all, but one, of the following

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Bar to use unconnected with enjoyment, is provided in section . . . . . . . . of The Indian Easements Act 1882

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To perfect a right of easement minimum period of enjoyment is prescribed in law and to institute a suit for claiming such right this period must end

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Dominant heritages’ under the Easements Act, 1882 means:

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Easement is an offshoot of the law of

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Which section of The Indian Easements Act 1882 deals with Continuous and discontinuous, apparent and non-apparent, easements?

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A license is not deemed to be revoked under section 62 of the Indian Easements Act

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An easement

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The owner of the land for beneficial enjoyment of whom the right exists is called the

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Match the following

a. Continuous easement
1. A right of way annexed to A’s house over B’s land.

b. Non-apparent easement
2. Rights annexed to A’s land to lead water thither across B’s land by an aqueduct and to draw off water thence by a drain. The drain would be discovered upon careful inspection by a person conversant with such maters.

c. Discontinous easement
3. A right annexed to easement B’s house to receive light by the windows without obstruction by his neighbour A.

d. Apparent easement
4. A right annexed to easement A’s house to prevent B from building on his own land.

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Section 17 of The Indian Easements Act 1882 provides . . . . . . . . ?

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Section 25 of The Indian Easements Act 1882 deals with . . . . . . . . ?

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The Indian Easements Act came into force on

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Choose the correct answer
(1) Simple licence is always revocable at the will of the licensor and it is also not assignable.
(2) Simple licence is not revocable at the will of the licensor and it is assignable.
(3) In licence coupled with a grant of interest the licensor cannot in general revoke it so as to defeat the grant to which it is incident.
(4) In licence coupled with a grant of interest the licensor can in general revoke it.

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A, the owner of a mill, has acquired a prescriptive right, to divert to his mill part of the water of a stream. A alters the machinery of his mill. He

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Land used as pathway by villagers for going to river Ghat because there was no other way for going to river Ghat and that villagers were using river water for domestic and drinking purposes as there was no well or tank in village, it was proved

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Which of the following is not an easement right?

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The expenses which can be defrayed by the dominant owner

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“Where the access and use of light or air to and for any building have been peaceably enjoyed therewith as an easement, and as of right, without interruption, and for, years and where any way or watercourse or the use of any water or any other easement (whether affirmative or negative) has been peaceably and openly enjoyed by any person claiming title thereto as an easement and as of right without interruption and for, years the right to such accessand use of light of air, way, watercourse, use of water, or other easement shall be absolute and indefeasible.”
Fill in the first and second blank respectively, given in the afore mentioned passage, out of the four options given below:

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Section 12 of The Indian Easements Act 1882 deals with . . . . . . . . ?

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The Limitation Act provides, “a right not arising from contract, by which one person is entitled to remove and appropriate for his own profit any part of the soil belonging to another or anything growing in, or attached to, or subsisting upon, the land of another,” What is name this right?

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Right which cannot be acquired by prescription

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Which sections of the Indian Easements Act codify the statutory law relating to license

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